No, your body kills it. iVM helps your body kills it with several mechanism. There is a good graphic look for it I don't have on hand. Don't forget the zinc also.
The gain of function research was to figure out how to make the "vaccines" more harmful.
The virus (SARS-CoV-2) does not exist because no viruses exist.
If the virus does not exist, then it cannot have a "spike protein" that means anything.
But something similar could be put into a drug cocktail.
Ivermectin kills parasites. I suspect that people get parasites far more often than we realize, just like farm animals do, and these parasites cause some of the illnesses we get. This could be why people have been getting sick and then recovering after taking the horse paste.
No, your body kills it. iVM helps your body kills it with several mechanism. There is a good graphic look for it I don't have on hand. Don't forget the zinc also.
Ty
Here, that'll be 5 bucks
The 2nd graphic explain how it can help dampen cytokine storm.
Ty so much !
I think the spike protein is a red herring.
The gain of function research was to figure out how to make the "vaccines" more harmful.
The virus (SARS-CoV-2) does not exist because no viruses exist.
If the virus does not exist, then it cannot have a "spike protein" that means anything.
But something similar could be put into a drug cocktail.
Ivermectin kills parasites. I suspect that people get parasites far more often than we realize, just like farm animals do, and these parasites cause some of the illnesses we get. This could be why people have been getting sick and then recovering after taking the horse paste.
Human beings are the only domesticated animals that don’t get regularly dewormed of parasites. Our dogs and cats have healthier tickers than us. Lol
Ty
It works. Don’t focus on the damn spike. That is what it is. Be glad to get natural antibodies and not some laboratory spike creature.
Ty
ive heard pine needle tea kills the spike....of course, look into it dont just take someone word
Ty
OK is the spike protein "alive"? It is a protein, right?